Sunday, April 29, 2007

April 29 UPDATE: the Federation of Black Cowboys


Dear LHAAFF friends,

The screening of the inspiring documentary THE FEDERATION OF BLACK COWBOYS , directed by Eric Martz, will go ahead as planned with a start time of 4:00 PM. Unfortunately, we were notified late yesterday that the Northwest Black Horsemen will not attend.

We had originally hoped that they would join us to enjoy the film and exhibit bullwhip and lasso tricks, but unfortunately, this is not possible .

However, please do join us for the screening of a wonderful film and the BBQ lunch and dessert, catered by Seattle's own Jones Barbeque, following the film. Your $10 entry ticket includes the movie and food.

Our sincere thanks to everyone for your support.

SYNOPSIS
East New York, Brooklyn - the city’s most notorious gangland has more than its fair share of the bad and the ugly. On this urban frontier, the good guys are The Federation of Black Cowboys. Seven days a week these modern-day wranglers can be found at the Cedar Lane Stables, fulfilling their mission to pass down the legacy of the black cowboys to inner city youth. The documentary leads us to a world on the other side of the fence where respect for life is taught through horsemanship. The stories of these cowboys - ranging from 16-year-old Mikey, whose delinquent life has been transformed through his discovery of the stables, to 90-year-old Ben, a former rodeo champion who rode with Will Rogers - reveal how the code of the West flourishes in a tough Eastern urban environment.

Saturday, April 28, 2007

UPDATE: Corrected bio for S. Pearl Sharp, April 29 guest filmmaker


The LHAAFF regrets that an incorrect bio was published in the print version of the program book. Guest filmmaker S. Pearl Sharp will present her acclaimed documentary THE HEALING PASSAGE: VOICES FROM THE WATER on Sunday, April 29 at 1:00 PM. Admission is $7.00. A correct version of the bio follows:

S. Pearl Sharp's work focuses on cultural arts, health and Black history. An
independent filmmaker, she created the semi-animated film short Picking Tribes, with watercolors by artist Carlos Spivey; Life Is A Saxophone, on poet Kamau Daa'ood; a controversial women's health video, It's O.K. To Peek, produced with Arabella Chavers-Julien; and Back Inside Herself, a poetic short. S. Pearl wrote and directed numerous arts documentaries for the City of Los Angeles' CH 35, with Exec. Producer Rosie Lee Hooks, including Central Avenue Live!, L.A. to L.A., Spirits of the Ancestors and Fertile Ground: Stories From the Watts Towers Arts Center. She is Supervising Producer for five new short films addressing gang violence, sponsored by the Black Hollywood Education and Resource Center (BHERC). Sharp’s most recent work is The Healing Passage/Voices From The Water, an award-winning, feature length documentary that addresses the present-day residuals of the trans-Atlantic slave trade through the work of cultural artists.

S. Pearl writes "soft songs, hard poems and 3rd eye music." Her essays and
commentaries are heard on NPR radio, and she is the current Poet Laureate
of the Watts Towers Arts Center. Her published literary works include Black Women For Beginners (Writers and Readers), the plays Dearly Beloved and The Sistuhs, four volumes of poetry and a spoken word CD, On The Sharp Side. She worked with esteemed actress Beah Richards on There's A Brown Girl In The Ring, a collection of the actress' essays, later adapting them to stage.

Based in Los Angeles, S. Pearl is both a practitioner and student of holistic healing. www.aSharpShow.com
...
About the film:

How do we heal from the residuals of The Middle Passage?Cultural artists, along with historians and healers, look at present day behavior that is connected to the Trans-Atlantic slave trade. For more than 300 years Africans were carried from their homeland, across the Atlantic Ocean ("The Middle Passage"), into chattel slavery in the Americas and the Caribbean. The residual impact of this African Holocaust still reverberates in the world today through psychological trauma, genetic memory, personal and community consciousness. The artists use music, dolls, dance, altars, spoken word, visual art and ritual to create paths to healing.
With commentary by historian Dr. Yosef A. A. ben-Jochannan (Dr. Ben), Goree Island curator Boubacar Joseph Ndiaye, health professionals Lola Kemp and Dr. Olivia Cousins, and Maafa Conference founder Rev. Dr. Johnny Ray Youngblood. And the artistry of actress CCH Pounder, Brother Yusef the Bluesman, bassist Nedra Wheeler, writer/singer Shonda Buchannan (Nyesha Khalfani), doll maker Angela Briggs, visual artists Ra6 and Abbey Onikoyi and others.

AFROPUNK director James Spooner returns to Seattle tonight, April 28!

Don't miss tonight's rare opportunity! The LHAAFF welcomes back AFROPUNK director, James Spooner, with this special presentation of a festival version of his forthcoming feature, WHITE LIES, BLACK SHEEP about a young Black man and his struggles with identity and integration in Manhattan's club/punk scene. Post-screening Q&A with director James Spooner. Admission is $7.

UPDATE: Sunday, April 29 closing event


Due to insurance coverage restrictions, we regret that we are unable to have live horses at the April 29 closing reception at 5:00 p.m. April 29. However, we DO have our special guests, members of the Northwest Black Horsemen, who are traveling from around Washington State to join us at 4:00 PM for the screening of the inspiring documentary, THE FEDERATION OF BLACK COWBOYS. The Horsemen will demonstrate bullwhip and lasso techniques, all skills that were part of daily life in cattle drives and ranch work in the old West. Many of the horsemen have performed in rodeos and all have been involved with horseback riding for many years. Ask questions, see the demonstrations, and learn more about the historic role of African Americans in the West!

The film start time has changed from 3:00 PM to 4:00 PM. A festive reception with delicious food from Seattle's own Jones Barbeque follows. Admission: $10 (includes food).

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Blaxploitation films: Friday, April 27

Greetings!

We are coming down to the final days of our little gem of a festival with a one-two weekend punch sure to please all audiences!

Friday is packed! Take the afternoon off and join us for a long lunch matinee featuring the world premiere of David Walker's Uncle Tom's Apartment @ 12:30. Order lunch and we'll bring it to your seat. Plays with American Red and Black, Through Martha's eyes and The Hardest Part.

Then, go home and get your Afro wig and join us for a Blackbuster evening when Walker presents Macked, Hammered, Slaughtered and Shafted. This riveting documentary features all the favorites from the heyday of Blaxploitation - Ron O'Neal, Pam Grier, Fred Williamson all talk about how blaxploitation films saved an ailing hollywood machine.

And screw your wig on tight, cause the Hip Shakin' Papa is here! RUDY RAY MOORE IS DOLEMITE. He will join us at the Royal Esquire Club tonight at 9:00 PM to screen his latest world premiere film Dolemite Explosion.

Macked, Hammered, Slaughtered, Shafted & Dolemite Explosion
Date: Tonight!
Time: 7PM and 9PM
Location: Langston Hughes & Royal Esquire Club
More info: 206.326.1088 or 206.684.4758

Saturday and Sunday at Langston Hughes

Join us for a weekend variety of films that are sure to satisfy! Saturday features an animation workshop with Shawnelle and Shawnee Gibbs of Adopted by Aliens , an African Film Marathon and the premiere of White Lies, Black Sheep with AFROPUNK director James Spooner and featuring Seattle native, Ayinde Howell.

Sunday features S. Pearl Sharp as she presents her beautiful film about the effects of the middle passage titled, the Healing Passage. The festival closes with the poignant documentary and an old fashioned barbecue picnic sponsored by Jones Barbecue. $10 gets you a film-The Federation of Black Cowboys, a meal, courtesy of Jones Barbecue, and a chance to meet a real live Black cowboy! Truly a family treat!

Saturday and Sunday
DATE: Saturday and Sunday
TIME: check schedule for times
LOCATION: Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center
MORE: Call 206.326.1088 or Langston @ 206.684.4758


Long Lunch Matinee #2

FRIDAY, APRIL 27
...
12:30 PM: LONG LUNCH MATINEE $7 / $2 age 12 and under
AMERICAN RED & BLACK: STORIES OF AFRO-NATIVE IDENTITY
This moving documentary follows Vella, a self-identified African-American, as she researches and reflects on her Native American heritage. People of African American and Native American family backgrounds share their personal perspectives on Native American and African interactions, past & present. Director: Alicia Woods (local). 39 min.

THROUGH MARTHA'S EYES
Historical drama about a female slave's experiences at an Indian Mission school in "Bloody Kansas", 1856. The storyline alludes to the deadly battles over slave/free territory during this painful period of American history. Seattle premiere. The film will be aired in selected PBS markets across the USA this autumn. Director: Chuck Cranston. 42 min.

THE HARDEST PART
Short and sweet, this NYC drama about friendship and first love features a then-unknown Seth Gilliam (The Wire). Film by Mike D. (Mike Dennis) of ReelBlack, Philadephia. 11 min.

UNCLE TOM'S APARTMENT (rough cut)
Two abandoned White children appeal to their Black godfather for help. Directed by Portland, OR-based filmmaker David Walker, who is in Seattle to present this and his Blaxploitation documentary. 80 min.

ADOPTED BY ALIENS Intro to Animation workshop with guest animators, the Gibbs Twins!


FRIDAY, APRIL 27

10:00 AM – 11:30 AM: ADOPTED BY ALIENS with guest filmmakers Shawnee and Shawnelle Gibbs.
Youth and audiences of all ages will have the opportunity to engage with two delightful storytelling sisters, Shawnelle and Shawnee Gibbs and their award winning animated series Adopted by Aliens. Adopted tells the story of Whitney Ward, an orphan who never expected that the love and acceptance she seeks would come from outer space. Filmmakers Shawnee and Shawnelle Gibbs will discuss filmmaking and Flash animation. Admission: $2 for kids and adults.

This workshop will be repeated on Saturday, April 28 , 1:00 – 2:00 PM. Workshop fee: $2 age 12 and under, all others $7.

www.langstonblackfilmfest.org
http://lhaaffbside.blogspot.com/

Music is My Life, Politics

Tonight: MUSIC IS MY LIFE…THE OSCAR BROWN, JR. STORY at the LHAAFF


Come to the Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center tonight, April 26, at 7:30 PM for this wonderful documentary on life and work of Oscar Brown, Jr., the great jazz musician, union leader, political candidate, and social commentator. Director Donnie L. Betts will be present for a special post-show Q&A. Don’t miss this rare opportunity and inspiring film experience! General admission: $7. Children age 12 and under: $2.

The Langston Hughes African American Film Festival continues tomorrow with great matinee films and an evening Blaxploitation presentation.

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Guest filmmaker Donnie L. Betts on KCPQ-13 (Seattle)



Seattle area residents - tune in to Fox affiliate KCPQ-13 for the Thursday, April 26 local morning news broadcast between 8:30 a.m. - 9:00 a.m. to see an interview with documentary filmmaker Donnie L. Betts!
Mr. Betts will present his documentary, MUSIC IS MY LIFE, POLITICS MY MISTRESS: THE STORY of OSCAR BROWN, JR. at the Langston Hughes African American Film Festival on April 26 at 7:30 p.m. Stay for the post-screening Q&A session.

SWAHILINI (April 28, 2:30 pm African Film Marathon)



About SWAHILINI (Seattle premiere, April 28 at 2:30 pm)

An African musical and social documentary by Pierre Klochendler

SWAHILINI renders through songs the daily life of Daddy, street songster in Dar es Salaam's most dangerous slum. A social, musical, testament to the sad glory of poverty outlasting misery in a world of double negation – what Daddy lacks is no more than a measure of what he needs...

The calling card of this young Congolese musician; an illegal migrant in Tanzania, stranded in Dar es Salaam’s biggest squatter camp, Manzese, a forbidding place known locally as ‘The Hyena’s Den’ – its name conjuring up an old-style Sicilian atmosphere. This squalid squatter camp has the raw grey face of salvaged scrap where nothing is lost, nothing created, dangerous – Hatari!

Through its non-descript alleys the author follows the fortunes of this street artist, as he seeks to make his way to the recording studio. Daddy Maisha is a GRIO, a songster of Swahili life in the urban slums of modern Africa, a repository of the culture of the dispossessed, a coryphaeus of those who own nothing, who envy those who have almost nothing.

Born out of mutual trust, – both moral and practical: a first film for a first album, “Swahilini” and “Fleur Rose” –, “Swahilini” tells the improbable friendship between Daddy and Pierre, the “first white man of Manzese”, who lived in Manzese, who filmed and directed the account of daily life in Manzese.

Manzese is an urban fabric in rags, dressed in non urbane relations; where friendship and protection are traded in the margins of Law – Sheria.

The street code: a rite of passage, a right of passage that the camera must negotiate through the daily interaction filmed over one year between the people of Manzese and the white man – Mzungu.

Daddy is Pierre’s protector, his African eyes and ears.

Temporary by nature and definition, this squatter camp exudes an overwhelming sense of oppressive everlastingness, the hand-me-down poverty of a contemporary urban slum. Manzese – where the living have no distinguishable past, but a very lively place - humanity in constant flow, in transit, on the run, clandestine.

Clandestine too, “the white man of Manzese”, whom its people nickname Mzungu kachoka, “the weary white man near his end”, because his plastic flip-flop sandals lead him where litter carves out the abject geology of its forlorn terrain.

Daddy Maisha introduces Pierre to the people of this makeshift world; in humility, they open their doors – and their hearts. They speak, they rap the pulse of daily life, they rap the word of God, they audition in the streets, and they dance a Capella their passion for music, their faith in the feisty street tunes of freedom of those who have nothing to lose. But, the bare threads of their lives are no musical score; it is a pitiful predicament of their destitution.

Tuned in to their beat, “Swahilini” is both musical and social testament to the sad glory of the human condition trapped below the ‘poverty line’; through Daddy Maisha’s story and of his music, it is also testament to the simplicity of living Lumpen poverty, in accordance with the popular Kiswahili saying “the poor man’s wealth is in the strength of his own labor.” It is a world of double negation: what the people of Manzese lack is no more than a measure of what they need. This is a place where misery and poverty are in constant struggle, where the poor seek to outlast misery.

At once personal and general, at once fictitious and realistic, it is a multi-voiced reflection on the practical conditions which define what it means to survive, to sustain body and soul, on less than a dollar a day:

Their water and their food, their lust for money and the money of love, their friends and their family, their roots and their memories, their futureless future, their confrontation with the stranger in their midst, with the ‘White world’ beyond.

Through the voice of this songster on a tin-roof, “Swahilini” offers an intimate encounter with the Africa-of-the-disinherited – a sentimental and a movingly lyrical look at the dreams of men and women who are only what they have, who live for having, and not for being.

- description by Pierre Klochendler


Comments from the Curator:

The film reveals modern Africa as a complex place -- unromanticized, with people speaking honestly about their view of colonialism, daily life, and the all-encompassing need for money. Daddy Maisha records AIDS awareness songs and is connected to his community of Manzese, greeting men and women alike with a familiar 'soul shake'. He prays before beginning the recording of his first album, "Fleur Rose".

Contradictions and ironies abound. At a flea market, a Muslim woman tries on a bra over her hijab. The derelict building where unemployed young men hang out to smoke dope, gamble, and dream of emigrating to Europe or North America to make money, bears graffiti such as 'Nas', the name of an American rapper, and 'Tesco', the name of a British retail chain, on its walls. A plastic bucket, beaten with two Afro combs, becomes a percussion instrument.

The traditional walls between filmmaker and subjects are removed as Tanzanians speak directly about inequalities of wealth and power and the damage of colonialism to the heart and psyche. "I 'm not afraid of you or Osama," declares one young flaneur.

Poverty and struggle are presented honestly and directly. A man who earns $4 USD/ day by hauling 476 pound sacks greets the filmmaker with a not-quite-teasing shout of , "Hey, white man, give me my wage!" Again and again, the cyncism, belief that all Whites are wealthy, and a hard-eyed pragmatism reveal themselves. Neighbors ask Maisha, "Why are you working? A White man is looking after you."

Daddy Maisha records AIDS awareness songs and is connected to his community of Manzese, greeting men and women alike with a familiar 'soul shake'. He prays before beginning the recording of his first album, "Fleur Rose".

A limited number of copies of Daddy Maisha’s CD are available for sale ($20) at the merchandise table in the festival lobby. All sale proceeds will go directly to Daddy Maisha.

Other films screening during the program include:

THE SWENKAS

Among the laborers working in Johannesburg are a group of men who transform themselves every Saturday night into Swenkas. They wear finely tailored Western suits and participate in a competition that is part fashion show, part beauty contest, part talent. Director: Jeppe Rønde.2004. 72 min.

SUFFERING & SMILING

Political dissident, musician, and cultural figure Fela Anikulapo Kuti. Relatives and fellow musicians give accounts of how Nigeria's government harassed Kuti. Includes an account of how his son, Femi Kuti, has become a musician and dissident in his own right. Director: Dan Ollman.2007. 60 min.

General admission to the program, which includes all 3 films, is $7.00.

Exciting local films - NAKED LIFE with guest Malik Isasis


Greetings!

The festival is in full swing with five more powerhouse days of Black cinema. Click here to download a full schedule of events. The rest of the week is packed full with wonderful films that you do not want to miss!

Tonight, young people take over the screen as the festival presents films by for and about youth. Reel Grrls is a unique after school media and technology training program that empowers girls to be critical media consumers and effective media users. This afternoon, the Reel Grrls will be on hand to screen SWIIRL, Hair Piece, Made up Of and Breaking the Cycle.
This after-school screening will also feature other youth made shorts from across the country. 5:00 PM - Admission $2 for adult and youth.

Our 7:30 PM evening feature brings local filmmaker, Malik Isasis to the festival to showcase his hauntingly beautiful film, Naked Life. Ben and Francesca have enjoyed a safe, stable relationship for 12 years, but when Francesca finds herself falling out of love their world begins to disintegrate. Shot in Seattle and Berlin, this film and the filmmaker are truly a gift to Seattle's film community.
Malik is a thoughtful film artist who has made 9 feature length films in and around Seattle over the past few years. He has provided opportunities for countless film industry creatives to practice the art and the craft of filmmaking. Malik is a brother on the rise. Tonight will be his last screening in Seattle before he moves to New York City.

Come out tonight so that you can say, "Oh yeah, I remember seeing some of his earlier works."

Naked Life is preceded by NYC filmmaker Trevor Parham's short, Look Right.


Greetings!

The festival is in full swing with five more powerhouse days of Black cinema. Click here to download a full schedule of events. The rest of the week is packed full with wonderful films that you do not want to miss!

Tonight, young people take over the screen as the festival presents films by for and about youth. Reel Grrls is a unique after school media and technology training program that empowers girls to be critical media consumers and effective media users. This afternoon, the Reel Grrls will be on hand to screen SWIIRL, Hair Piece, Made up Of and Breaking the Cycle.
This after-school screening will also feature other youth made shorts from across the country. 5:00 PM - Admission $2 for adult and youth.

Our 7:30 PM evening feature brings local filmmaker, Malik Isasis to the festival to showcase his hauntingly beautiful film, Naked Life. Ben and Francesca have enjoyed a safe, stable relationship for 12 years, but when Francesca finds herself falling out of love their world begins to disintegrate. Shot in Seattle and Berlin, this film and the filmmaker are truly a gift to Seattle's film community.
Malik is a thoughtful film artist who has made 9 feature length films in and around Seattle over the past few years. He has provided opportunities for countless film industry creatives to practice the art and the craft of filmmaking. Malik is a brother on the rise. Tonight will be his last screening in Seattle before he moves to New York City.

Come out tonight so that you can say, "Oh yeah, I remember seeing some of his earlier works."

Late breaking news: guest filmmakers at "Falling Together in New Orleans" screening

We're pleased to announce that Farrah Hoffmire (director) and Mitchell Davis (producer) , the makers of FALLING TOGETHER IN NEW ORLEANS will make a special surprise appearance at the screening of their film on Thursday, April 26 at 12:30 p.m. We're pleased to welcome them to the LHAAFF. The documentary sensitively tells the inspiring true story of how individual people joined together to attempt to rebuild the lives of New Orleanians affected by Hurricane Katrina. The film is preceded by two shorts, Brigid Maher's AWOL, the story of an African American female soldier who goes AWOL in Iraq, becomes lost in the desert, and is rescued by Iraqi children; and FINDING A JOB IN HOUSTON, an information video produced by the Community Settlement Network of Houston, featuring actual Katrina survivors in a short film intended to aid in resettlement efforts. Admission to the program is $7. Please join us for this thought-provoking selection of independent films addressing contemporary concerns in American life.

Friday, April 20, 2007

Invisible Universe: a history of blackness in speculative fiction, April 24 (rough cut)

A clarification and correction: the version of M. Asli Dukan's documentary film, INVISIBLE UNIVERSE, is a rough cut. Dukan will be present to introduce the film and discuss it during an in-depth filmmaker talkback following the screening.

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Welcoming all to the 2007 Langston Hughes African American Film Festival, Seattle




Dear friends of the LHAAFF,

I extend a sincere welcome to all as the 2007 Langston Hughes African American Film Festival begins its fourth year. We appreciate the support of our community partners, sponsors, volunteers, and of course you, the audience.

It is with respect and pleasure that the LHAAFF Advisory Committee dedicates this year’s event to the memory of the late James Brown and Octavia Butler, who passed to the realm of the ancestors this past year. These creative giants each held a unique and compelling place of honor in their respective fields. Each produced work with a powerful cross-generational influence. The alchemy of Brown’s powerful stage persona and skills as a singer, bandleader, songwriter, and dancer combined to make a unique style. Even his recorded music could make you feel as though you didn’t want to stop dancing. Octavia Butler’s speculative/science fiction novels immerse the reader in the alternate world she creates. Familiar themes like time travel, telekinesis, vampires and alternate, sometimes dystopian futures for the Earth go in surprising new directions in Butler’s engaging storytelling. She is fondly remembered for her friendship and mentorship of emerging writers. Her characters and intellectually challenging storylines can make you want to stay up past your bedtime or miss your bus stop. We are hoping that you will have a similar “can’t put it down” reaction to the diverse variety of films on this year’s schedule; that you won’t stop dancing, but will enjoy as many films and workshops as possible this year.

There is work by filmmakers from a wide variety of ethnic and national backgrounds: African American, Black British, European American, French-Israeli, Ghanian-American, Jewish, African/Native American, South African, and South African/South Asian. Each day, stories from around the African diaspora express the complexity of Black life in fictional narrative and documentary forms.

To paraphrase the old saying, being Black ain’t easy, but it sure is interesting. Saddle up with the Black cowboys of Brooklyn. Explore the idea of Blackness in alternative, “what-if” scenarios of the present and the future (THE SPOOK WHO SAT BY THE DOOR, INVISIBLE UNIVERSE). Experience the musical and political scene of modern Nigeria with Fela Kuti’s son Femi.

At a Tanzanian flea market, a Muslim woman tries on a bra over her hijab, before one young man, a group of several planning to migrate and seek work in Europe or Canada, declares to the camera and by extension, the industrialized world, "I 'm not afraid of you or Osama." (SWAHILINI).

Hear from Black women and men working together to reduce violence, sexual and otherwise, in our communities (NO!, PEACE PROCESS). Ask yourself how the Middle Passage has lingering effects on your own life (THE HEALING PASSAGE). Look deeply into what was good and bad about Blaxploitation (MACKED, HAMMERED, SLAUGHTERED AND SHAFTED, surely one of the best film titles ever).

Part of the LHAAFF mission is a commitment to presenting independently produced work, and we are honored to have several films by talented local filmmakers. Please take the opportunity to meet them, participate in post-screening talkback sessions, and be a voice of appreciation and support.

Thank you for your support of the LHAAFF.

Zola M.

Curator